Normally, Netrunner OS is a Kubuntu-based distribution, and it comes out to the market about a month after its
papa is released, twice a year. Now, this time around, the dev team has done
something interesting, they have released a rolling version of the distro, based on Arch and Manjaro. So the
big question is, should you take our your obsidian ax and start sacrificing virgins unto the deities of command
line?

To answer that question, let's do a review. I will be installing and testing Netrunner Rolling 2014.04 edition
on my T61 laptop, which has Intel graphics and Wireless, two SSD, and already houses four distros. We will
displace one, to wit, you keep on reading.

Live session

The desktop booted fine, without any problems. It's a typical Netrunner KDE
session, well branded and familiar by now, but just to help you, in case you had any doubts, there's a
wallpaper to tell you what you're using.

The menu is okay, but it comes with a few quirks. One, it does not close, unless you choose an action, so it
remains there, waiting for you. Not the case in the standard edition. Two, the search is still somewhat wonky.
Three, search results are featured at the bottom rather than the top. It makes sense mouse-wise, but not for
people who expect things in a certain way.

The distro was behaving well overall, but there were a few stutters while loading data from the USB drive,
which are not noticeable in most distros. You also don't get any smooth scrolling in the browser.

Wireless & Samba

Both were fine, including 5GHz network. However, unlike most implementations of Samba, Netrunner Rolling set a
single filestamp for all files copied over, so it appears as if they were taken at the same time. Not nice for
a distro reviewer, like me, who wants to sort things chronologically.

Multimedia - All your fun are belong here

No problems. Almost. The codecs played well, Flash, MP3 and HD video. The thing was, when I right-clicked on a
music file, and fired up Clementine, it stalled. It didn't play the file. But if you open the GUI, open a file,
all is well. Moreover, the default music thingie is qmmp, and it's not pretty or consistent with the overall
KDE session.

Installation

Curiously enough, the installation is almost identical to the standard Kubuntu deal. It's a wizard, with a few
short steps. There were no issues. When you fire up the installer, it warns you that this is beta software, so
you should be careful. All right, fair enough.

Unlike most installers, this one does not acknowledge the presence of other distributions. Furthermore, it
says erase disc, but which one? There are two hard disks in this box, so it's not trivial. You must go with the
advanced mode.

The partitioning step is a little different, because it also displays tiny free space alignment in between
partitions that really serves no purpose whatsoever, and the Extended partition is shown, too. You also get
those dev/zram thingies, which is silly. You can't possibly install there, so why list them? The same applies
to 807K and 161K free space and all the rest. There's also a column that reads SSD, and then corresponding
checkmarks for devices that match this. Why? I have no idea. Anyhow, other than that, you will find your way
around.

The timezone is set for Berlin, and it does not auto-adjust to where you are. Then, you have the slideshow. The
text is not written or rendered on the fly, it's actually an image, and so the text shows with a non-native
DPI/resolution whatever, and feels somewhat cheap.

The installation wasn't very quick. It took about 25 minutes to complete. After that, I rebooted into the
Ubuntu Salamander instance, which controls the startup sequence of this
four-boot system, and updated the GRUB bootloader. After that, Netrunner Rolling
showed up in the menu, and we could test some more.

All praise the terminal lords

Now, should we start using that obsidian ax? Well, not just yet. Netrunner, despite its Archy and Manjaroish
legacy was behaving like a cultured operating system, without forcing you to do any of the sisyphic steps
normally associated with the would-be advanced distros.

Package management

I was expecting a nightmare, a-la Gentoo. Nope. You have a decent package manager, which comes with the pacman
logo, but it's called Octopi. It works fine, even though it could be a little more intuitive when it comes to
upgrades. During one of the upgrades, there were a lot of repos that failed to return the needed packages, and
that worried me a little, but then, the procedure completed successfully, with all the stuff installed. The
repo thing is ugly, but it does not cause any issues.

Applications

The default collection is rich and colorful. Maybe a little too much. There's everything, and then some. Too
many multimedia programs, including unnecessary stuff like Kdenlive and something called vokoscreen. Don't get
me wrong, I love Kdenlive, but it does not belong in a default set for
pretty much any distro.

You have Firefox, Thunderbird, LibreOffice, GIMP, Clementine, VLC, Kamoso is there and the web cam works fine,
Skype, and such like. It's really nice, but it can be polished a little bit.

System resources, stability, suspend & resume

Yes, yes and yes. Very surprising. Compare this to Manjaro. Well, there were
no bugs or crashes, nothing too visible. Suspend & resume also worked fine. As far as resource utilization
goes, Netrunner Rolling is rather hungry, but only memory wise, consuming approximately 800MB raw. The CPU
dances in the low single digits, about 4-5% on average, and the responsiveness is quite good.

Desktop effects

Did not work, I'm sorry.

Printing

No Samba printing, damn.

Other annoyances

So the following stuff bugged me. I marked autologin during the install, but this did not happen. Firefox
scrolling remains chopped. Firefox also opens new tabs and switches focus to them, immediately, so you will
need to change this, if you prefer to stay where you are when launching new tabs. The Netrunner logo aspect
ratio is scrunched a little on 16:9 screens.

Customization

This being KDE, and the splendid openSUSE Plasma theme lurkingnearby, you can pimp up the distro to the max. The end result of three minutes and
sixteen seconds of hard work, and it fits the overall mojo well, no?

Conclusion

Surprise, surprise, you need not shed blood, burn virgins or anything of that sort to get Netrunner Rolling
working properly. And it does not really matter what it's based on, because the nerdonics do not come to bear.
This is a very decent distro, and just as easy as any out there. Now, take a moment for this to sink in.
Dedoimedo expressing solid enthusiasm for what is essentially Arch or Manjaro. As probable as you winning a
month of vacation at the Playboy mansion, together with your significant other, plus free massage.

Netrunner Rolling 2014.04 is a good product. It's not perfect, though. Desktop effects, native fonts in the
installer, printing, browser preferences, auto-login niggles, extra software, and such. All of these can be
refined. But there are no killer issues whatsoever, and the overall experience is quite positive. I guess a
nice 8.5/10 is warranted here, and definitely a product to watch and test. There we go.